Precisely which country he bombs doesn’t seem all that important to Trump, who’d likely have trouble finding any of his targets on a map.

In a recent interview with Fox, Trump said he’d attacked Iraq. Actually it was Syria, the anchor corrected. No matter. (Trump was clearer on the dessert he was eating as he launched the attack: “the most beautiful piece of chocolate cake that you’ve ever seen.”)

Now North Korea is in Trump’s crosshairs. It’s led by “this gentleman,” Trump repeated, apparently at a loss for his name.

Readers and Ratings

Whichever country Trump targets next, he’s likely to receive praise from the media.

That was the case with Trump’s launching of 59 missiles into Syria in response to the country’s April 4 chemical attack. Trump’s action was hailed by the media, which, like Trump, pinned blame for the chemical attack on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad despite serious questions and the absence of a thorough investigation.

A week later, Trump was basking in more praise, this time for dropping the “Mother of All Bombs” on Afghanistan.

“The more dangerous America’s crackpot President becomes, the saner the world believes him to be,” wroteThe Independent’s veteran Middle East reporter Robert Fisk. “[T]he moment he went to war in Yemen, fired missiles at Syria and bombed Afghanistan, even the US media Trump had so ferociously condemned began to treat him with respect.”

Never content, the media appears to be busy laying the groundwork for the next escalation; possibly a repeat performance in Syria, something new with Iran, or maybe North Korea.

“The next time you read a story about North Korea or see something about the country on TV, simply ask yourself what changed?” wroteGizmodo editor Matt Novak. “Did North Korea become a tangible threat to the safety and security of the United States in just a few short months? Or are you being sold on the idea of a war?”

And of course a war with nuclear-armed Russia is always a possibility, one the media seems excited about.

That none of us may survive to witness the aftermath seems somehow beside the point.